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The village of Follifoot is situated four miles south of Harrogate in rolling park and farmland. The centre of the village is located at the junction of the Pannal-Knaresborough and the Follifoot-Spofforth roads, with most of the older houses being found there. Views over the Plain of York, ranging from Sutton Bank, the TV transmitter at Bilsdale near Helmsley, Kilburn White Horse, Allerton Park, York Minster, Garrowby Hill, Thorparch and Tadcaster can be seen from the environs of the village which stands at six hundred feet above sea level. The village is unusual in that it is still "contained" at three points, where the narrowing of the main roads is still eveident, namely at The Priory, the Radcliffe Arms and The Horse Pond Beck. The houses and barns are almost entirely built of local Yorkshire stone, and many of the newer houses incorporate some stone in their structure. Many of the older buildings have been altered by modernisation, however much of the old architecture still remains. Several houses were known to have thatched roofs, but are now roofed with stone slates, some with older red pantiles. Steep gable ends and stone corbels are a feature of the older houses.
The
Horse Pond Beck flows across the line of the main street and reflects
the long association of the village with horse sports. The name of the
village being derived from the Norse meaning "Place of the Horse
Fight". This sport was popular in medieval times and the village
was probably a centre for the training of horses and the staging of fights.
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